Posts Tagged ‘ottawa spinal cord injury’

Ontario Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer, Ottawa Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer

Ontario Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers, Ottawa Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer David Hollingsworth.. 

Every day, someone in Canada suffers a spinal cord injury (“SCI”). This is the sad but real reality of spinal cord injuries. They are happening all the time. More than 80,000 Canadians currently live with some form of Spinal Cord Injury. Sadly, this number is expected to climb. A report by the Urban Futures Institute estimates that roughly 86,000 individuals currently have spinal cord injuries in Canada. Tragically, this number is set to increase to 121,000 by 2030. That’s an increase of 35,000 in less than 19 years.  Too high a number, in my opinion because we should be learning how to better prevent such injuries from occurring. The statistics are grim. Roughly 48,243 people with SCI’s are fully paralyzed, while 30,324 can still make use of their arms. Individuals with SCI will spend an average 140 days in hospital, and will die 15 to 30 years earlier than the average person with an average life expectancy. That’s because victims of SCI are more susceptible to medical complications like urinary tract infections, pressure ulcers, pneumonia and mental illnesses such as depression and anxiety. Christopher Reeve, for example, is a tragic and iconic example of a SCI victim dying of the enumerated causes – namely, depression and pressure ulcers. It is ironic that even the invincible and iconic superman of our generation was not invincible enough to avoid a spinal cord injury. These injuries are serious and can happen to anyone.  So please take care and exercise caution in situations where you or your loved ones could be at risk.

David Hollingsworth, Ottawa Ontario Personal Injury Lawyer   has been dedicated to helping Ottawa and Ontario accident victims since 1999. Due to his extensive experience and knowledge of relevant accident and personal injury issues, he has recovered millions of dollars in settlements on behalf of his Ontario personal injury and accident victims. David is dedicated to obtaining maximum compensation for his personal injury clients. David offers free consultations and makes home visits or hospital visits. Visit www.ottawainjury.ca for more information.

mobile   (613) 978-9549      (613) 237-4922 ext.203

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Common Injuries from Motorcycle accidents – Ottawa Accident Lawyers

Ottawa Accident Lawyer, Ottawa Motorcycle Accident Lawyer David Hollingsworth-

The weather in Ottawa is expected to hit somewhere in the high 20s this long weekend.  With the warm weather, many motorcycle enthusiasts will likely be hauling their motorcycle out of storage and hitting Ottawa roads.  Motorcyclists are not as protected as those who drive cars and most accidents result in quite severe personal injury.  As an Ontario personal injury lawyer in Ottawa, David Hollingsworth has helped many Ontario motorcycle accident victims get maximum compensation for the most common personal injuries as a result of a motorcycle accident.

Common Personal Injuries from Motorcycle Accidents
Top Ottawa Personal injury lawyer David Hollingsworth has dealt with a range of common injuries secondary to motorcycle accidents, which can include a personal injury-fracture, spinal cord injury, brain damage and concussion, nerve damage, emotional trauma, and pain and suffering. Basically, these accidents all have a common theme: you have been hurt and are entitled to maximum compensation for your personal injury.

Fractures are a common personal injury secondary to motorcycle accidents, which often throw victims from the motorcycle and can produce fractures and lacerations if bones break through the surface of the skin. This can also result in damage to tendons, joints and nerves.

Spinal cord injury are another very serious and common injury secondary to motorcycle accidents. They can occur if the vertebrae (or protected spinal cord that transmits nerve impulses from the brain to the rest of the body) suffers any injury. Severity depends on how much and what region of the spinal cord is damaged. Victims can become paralyzed from the neck down, or may lose some function in their legs, or any combination.

Brain damage and concussions can result from motorcycle accidents. Head trauma is common, causing a concussion or a traumatic brain injury that can dramatically reduce the victim’s overall quality of life and his or her ability to live independently. Often serious injuries can result in combinations of brain damage and concussion and spinal cord injury or some other serious issue – further aggravating your rehabilitation process and increasing the need to see a lawyer expert in your area of injury.

Nerve damage can occur when a motorcyclist lands on his or her arm, leg, or some other high nerve ending location of your body during an accident. The force of the impact can result in nerve damage and the loss of some or all function in the affected limb. Amputations may be required in any of the injuries depending on severity. There are methods of procuring compensation for such injuries.

Personal Injury-Disfigurement: Facial disfigurement can occur when drivers are not wearing protective face equipment.  Trauma to the face can result in intense pain, and the driver with the disfigurement may go through painful and expensive plastic surgery or have scars fromhe motorcycle accident for  life.

Emotional trauma such as pain and suffering is another devastating and common injury that can result from a motorcycle accident. Often, a physical injury has healed but the emotional scars still remain. These are what is known as emotional trauma or “pain and suffering” due to your accident. PTSD or “post traumatic stress disorder” is one among many forms of emotional trauma that can result from your injury.

As an Ontario motorcycle driver you do everything you can to prevent motorcycle accidents knowing that it can be dangerous. Even if you take every precaution, you may still end up with a personal injury from a motorcycle accident through no fault of your own. You may need compensation for medical needs, attendant care, housekeeping, and many other areas. David Hollingsworth is here to help.

If you are injured in an Ontario motorcycle accident you may need the help a highly skilled Ottawa, Ontario personal injury lawyer to help you maximize your insurance claim. Contact David Hollingsworth, Ottawa , Ontario Personal Injury Lawyer  for a free consultation.  Visit www.ottawainjury.ca or call 613 978-9549

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Please support Ottawa hockey dad. Accident resulting in spinal cord injury for Rene Faucher, father of 3.

Ottawa Spinal Cord Injury Lawyer, Ontario Spinal Cord Injury Lawyers David Hollingsworth….Please support Ottawa hockey dad. Accident resulting in spinal cord injury for Rene Faucher, father of 3.

Tragedy Strikes: Ottawa Hockey Accident Spinal Cord Injury.

A personal appeal from David Hollingsworth:

“Rene Faucher is a friend of mine and I urge anyone who can to please donate to support this incredibly wonderful family who have always given to the Ottawa community and now need your help. I personally thank you.”

Background:

Mr. Rene Faucher, a young father of three wonderful children under the age of five, and husband to Mrs. Dianne Douglas, may never walk again after a serious accident during a casual game of pick-up hockey at the University of Ottawa Sports Complex on Sunday. Faucher, 40, was rushed to Ottawa Civic Hospital after tragically going head first into the boards while playing hockey.

Though he was wearing a helmet, his spine experienced injury and doctors in the trauma unit are unable to ascertain if he will ever walk again. “We have to wait until the spinal shock subsides to understand what the long term recovery road looks like,” states Marc, Faucher’s brother to CTV Ottawa reporters. Faucher is self-employed and unfortunately does not have long-term disability insurance. Douglas expressed to CTV that she never thought her family would have to deal with such a tragedy: “Coming home to get that call, you just don’t ever think something serious would happen to you.” 

Family and friends, myself included, are now appealing to the community to step in and help in whatever way they can, every donation and expression of good will and support helps. Faucher’s brother Marc said the support has been overwhelming.
How You Can Help:

Donations can be made at any Scotiabank Branch, to The Faucher Douglas Trust Fund, Branch 25486, Account 0016713.
Alternatively, cheques payable to the “Faucher Douglas Trust Fund” can also be mailed to the attention of Russ Reil at Scotiabank, Markdale, Ontario.

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Ottawa spinal injury lawyer : Ottawa man with spinal cord injury writes his life story..

I plan on picking this up and thought I would share it with you..     Paul Legault: an inspiration to us all !

Ontario man writes about his life as a quadriplegic

A high school football accident left Paul Legault, a promising athlete, a quadriplegic in 1975. Since then, he has married, earned two university degrees, raised two children, coached softball and written books of poetry and children’s literature. But Legault’s latest project is proving the most difficult of all: He is writing his autobiography.

Paul Legault, 49, has been a quadriplegic since breaking his neck in a 1975 high school football game. But he has nonetheless earned two university degrees, married, raised two children, coached a raft of sports, worked as a counsellor and consultant, and written a handful of children's books, teen novels and a poetry collection. He is now working on his most difficult project: his memoirs.

Paul Legault, 49, has been a quadriplegic since breaking his neck in a 1975 high school football game. But he has nonetheless earned two university degrees, married, raised two children, coached a raft of sports, worked as a counsellor and consultant, and written a handful of children’s books, teen novels and a poetry collection. He is now working on his most difficult project: his memoirs.

From his hospital bed, Paul Legault eyed the typewriter parked in the corner of his room. It was an arm’s length away but might as well have been on another planet. He could barely move a muscle.

Legault had suffered a catastrophic neck injury during a high school football game. Two of his cervical vertebrae had been crushed, damaging beyond repair his spinal cord.

For two months, he had been in Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre with only flickers of movement in his left bicep. Prospects for recovery were grim, although no one had told him that yet.

Alone, with his family and friends back in his hometown of Kirkland Lake, Ont. — he had been flown to Toronto for rehabilitation — Legault was growing increasingly despondent.

Then his physiotherapist decided to seize on that twitch of electricity in his arm. She rolled Legault’s wheelchair to the corner, placed his left arm in a sling, attached it to a spring fastened to the ceiling, then perched his hand over the manual typewriter. A splint on his left hand held a blunt pencil.

Legault wriggled and bounced to gain enough momentum to mash the old keys with the pencil’s rubber end.

An hour later, exhausted, he had finished the first sentence of his new life: “I’ve just turned sixteen.”

As a boy, growing up in Kirkland Lake, Paul Legault didn’t aspire to a writing career.

His report cards were peppered with words like “lazy,” “disruptive” and “class clown.” Never much of a student, he dreamed of life as a professional athlete like some of the town’s hockey luminaries: Dick Duff, Ralph Backstrom, Bob and Barclay Plager.

Legault had every reason to think he’d follow in their footsteps.

As an outside linebacker for Kirkland Lake Collegiate and Vocational Institute, he had attracted the attention of Canadian Football League scouts. The Toronto Maple Leafs had expressed interest in him as a goalie prospect.

At 15, Legault held two Junior Olympics swim records — in the backstroke and individual medley — and had been invited to the 1976 Olympic trials. (His official invitation arrived while he was in Sunnybrook.)

He figured on joining the RCMP if his athletic career didn’t materialize.

But on Oct. 9, 1975, all of his collected dreams were left behind on the football field. In hospital, Legault came to realize that his childhood also ended that day, that he would never again know its carefree, kinetic bliss.

That’s when a typewriter entered his life and, quite possibly, saved it.

This is a year of milestones in the life of Paul Legault.

In July 2009, he celebrated his 25th wedding anniversary by taking a boat cruise with his wife, Janet. In late October, he will mark his 50th birthday with a party at his home in Ottawa.

For Legault, the passages invite reflection, which is a godsend for someone wrestling so heroically with his memoirs. Legault has been trying to put his life down on paper for more than 25 years.

There is much to write.

Four years after the injury that left him a quadriplegic, Legault moved to Ottawa to pursue a university degree. Carleton University had agreed to admit him, even though he had not completed high school.

Legault’s goal was to return to Kirkland Lake with a law degree to fight on behalf of other accident victims. He had received only $20,000 in an out-of- court settlement for his injury.

But he found the courses dull, so after two years, he transferred to Algonquin College where he earned a social services diploma. With a pen in his mouth, he took notes in class.

He went on to earn bachelor’s degrees at Carleton University (social work) and the University of Ottawa (education). In each case, he graduated summa cum laude, one of the top students in his year.

He married a fellow social worker, Janet Graham, in 1984, and together they’ve raised two children. Jason is now 17 years old; Jacob is 14.

Legault has coached hockey, diving and baseball. (He was so intense that his softball players once disconnected his wheelchair battery to prevent him from confronting the other team’s coach.)

He has worked as a co-ordinator with the Canadian Paraplegic Association; as a counsellor for students with disabilities at Algonquin College; and as a consultant on accessibility issues.

His love affair with writing has never wavered. For the past decade, he has devoted himself to it exclusively as a freelance editor and writer. He has published a book of poems, Life’s Path, children’s books, Doc the Hawk and Stringbean and the Giant, and written several teen novels.

He’s focused now on his autobiography, Backbone. The writing of Backbone has been fraught with false starts and wrong turns. After struggling for two years to pen the first 30 pages, Legault turned to a professional writer for help. Countless interviews followed. But the end product — it had ballooned to more than 700 formless pages — did not reflect Legault’s vision.

“The biggest message of the book is: ‘Never give up’,” he says.

Legault has received two Canada Council for the Arts grants to work on the project, which remains half-finished. He has completed about 200 pages, but the work is painfully slow since he tries to orchestrate full chapters in his head before committing them to print. He uses a mouthstick and a portable computer to write and edit. “It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life,” he says. “But I will never give up on that book until it’s done.”

His memoir begins on that fateful October day.

The second Thursday in October 1975, arrived as a crisp blue gift in northern Ontario.

In the town of Kirkland Lake, a community built to mine the gold of the Canadian Shield, 15-year-old Paul Legault inhaled a bowl of Cheerios, before bolting out the door for an early morning workout.

Legault had a bottomless appetite for physical activity. Football, baseball, hockey, soccer, swimming, diving, Legault was good at them all. His father, Marcel, a hotel manager and former gold miner, had once been a professional boxer. Those skills had been useful to his son.

“You’d either fight or you didn’t survive,” says Paul Legault, who was a muscular 5-foot-10, 180-pound teenager.

What would prove to be the longest day of Legault’s life started badly soon after he arrived at school. That morning, his girlfriend of eight days, Sally, announced that she didn’t want to see him any more. She offered him the money he’d paid for her ticket to the movie Jaws the previous weekend.

Then, his English teacher gave him the gears for showing up to drop off a note that excused him from class for a football game. He often skipped English class altogether.

It left Legault in a stormy mood as he boarded the team bus later that morning for the three-hour drive to Timmins, Ont. Everyone on the football team was in a suit and tie.

That day’s game was an occasion as the league’s undefeated teams, both 3-0, were to square off. Legault remembers the grass feeling so rich underfoot that he thought he might like to be tackled on it.

In the first half, the contest belonged to the Kirkland Lake Red Devils. The team had scored four unanswered touchdowns to take a 28-0 lead. Two minutes before halftime, Legault lined up for a kickoff following his team’s latest scoring drive. His job was to keep “containment” — to ensure the Timmins kick returner didn’t turn the corner on his side of the field.

Some Timmins girls on the sidelines heckled him as “useless.” Legault thought again of Sally —and boiled.

“Watch this,” he replied.

The kickoff, however, sailed to the far side of the field and Legault relaxed for a second. But the other team’s return man, Mike Kardis, managed to avoid tacklers as he steamed toward the far sideline and daylight.

Legault was the only one left between him and the end zone.

He ran straight toward Kardis and lowered his helmet, preparing to meet the 6-foot-2, 210-pound running back. He remembers trying to turn his head at the last second to avoid a helmet-on-helmet collision. He didn’t make the adjustment in time.

“At that instant,” he writes in his memoir, “I was sure a cannon had gone off in my ears.

“I could feel myself falling backwards and everything appeared to be happening in slow motion. The sun was bright in my eyes as I lay on the field looking up at the perfectly blue, cloudless sky and I remembered my earlier thoughts of how I wouldn’t mind being tackled, falling on the thick soft turf. Little did I know.

“I kept trying to get up, but I couldn’t. My legs and arms felt like they were pointing straight up in the air, like a dog on its back, but I could not see them. Panic . . . I began to panic because I couldn’t see my arms and legs sticking straight up. Where were they?”

The referee held Legault’s head to the ground as he struggled to get up. A crowd gathered. Legault grew frantic. He demanded to know what had happened to his limbs. He was assured they were still at his side. Then the referee asked if he could feel him pinching his legs. Legault didn’t understand what he was talking about: he felt no pain. He couldn’t feel a thing.

Janet Graham knew something was afoot when the same young man kept wheeling past her receptionist’s desk at The Ottawa Hospital’s Civic campus.

He had long brown hair, wide-set green eyes and a devilish smile that beamed out from his rakish beard. Some people said he looked like the actor Freddie Prinze, star of the popular ’70s sitcom, Chico and the Man. Janet didn’t think so.

“He was pretty cute, though,” she remembers.

One day, during that summer of 1982, the young man stopped at Janet’s desk. He asked her out for dinner; she suggested coffee instead.

Paul and Janet began to meet regularly in the cafeteria. He would faithfully deposit a polished green apple at her desk every morning. Eventually, he summoned the courage to ask her out again, to a friend’s wedding. This time, she agreed.

They danced together at the reception, Janet in his lap. A photograph from that night reveals a strikingly beautiful young couple aglow in each other’s company.

He wrote her poetry. They camped and travelled. Many people thought she was his nurse.

“It was a fairly natural assumption to make: People were kind of shocked,” she says. “I know my friends would say, ‘Are you going to marry him? You’re not going to marry him, are you?’ ”

Janet told her friends she wouldn’t not marry Paul just because he was in a wheelchair. Besides, she thought it complemented him.

“The wheelchair, I think, probably even made it more real,” she says. “It showed me what a determined person he was: The wheelchair didn’t slow him down. It made him a better person.”

Paul had told friends he had met his future wife after laying eyes on Janet for the first time. But he didn’t really believe his own bravado. “After the accident, it was not something I ever thought was possible.”

Yet, one year after their first date, Paul Legault and Janet Graham were engaged. On their wedding day, Janet was a half-hour late for the church service. Paul worried she had reconsidered, but the truth proved less dramatic: her father had stopped to get the car washed.

They spent their honeymoon in Niagara Falls.

On a visit to Marineland, they went to the petting zoo, where a deer took a shine to the wooden joystick that controlled Paul’s motorized wheelchair. The deer licked and chewed the salt-stained control, jerking Paul in every direction. When Janet steered the animal away, another deer took its place.

The newlyweds laughed and laughed.

In 34 years as a quadriplegic, there have been dark moments.

Legault remembers pondering the abyss one day while parked in his wheelchair behind Toronto’s Lyndhurst Centre, about one year after the accident. He thought about rolling into the Don River Valley below, but worried he might only ruin his face. “I thought, ‘Ah, I’ll just be ugly and be in a wheelchair.’ I was too vain to kill myself.”

He remembers returning to Kirkland Lake and going with friends to the park where he used to play baseball. A ball rolled against the side of his wheelchair, and although he tried mightily, Legault could not pick it up. He brooded for a week — he realized then he would never walk again — before resolving to work harder on his rehabilitation.

Legault remembers in 1986 waking from surgery that removed a cyst in his spinal cord only to discover the movement in his left arm and hands — movement he had worked so hard to build — had been lost in the operation. It meant he could no longer propel his own wheelchair, feed himself or lift himself into bed.

None of it, though, led him back to despair. He has never again contemplated suicide since that day atop the Don River Valley.

He knows he will never walk again. He doesn’t waste time thinking about it.

Instead, he concentrates on the gifts in his life: his wife (a cancer survivor), his children, his ability to write, to motivate other people. He insists, too, that he’s thankful for his life’s central challenge.

“I’m glad I had this accident for a lot of reasons,” he says. “One of them is because I’m the person I am today: I think I’m a well-adjusted, loving, caring person. And I don’t know if I would have been that had I not had the accident.”

His wheelchair has taught him much about sacrifice. His parents, Marcel and Barbara, mortgaged their home to help him; his two younger sisters, Christin and Sandy, nursed him for years.

“I didn’t realize, until later in life, how hard it must have been for them. But I love them for it.”

His wheelchair has given him faith in himself. Few thought he could succeed in university after his desultory high school career, but he proved himself an academic. Last year, Legault lost 80 pounds on an extremely low-calorie diet — he can’t exercise to lose weight — that also brought his diabetes and blood pressure under control.

Legault is not religious. He believes his exceptional willpower courses straight from his athlete’s heart.

“In sports, I was just so determined to do well at everything. This, being in a wheelchair, was just another thing I wasn’t going to fail at.”

Paul Legault’s one-storey home is set in a forest beside the Mississippi River. His backyard is so thickly treed that he must use his imagination to visualize the river from the window of his bedroom, where he spends most of his days, writing.

Legault has a bedside table with a portable computer mounted in a wooden frame. Its steeply angled keyboard allows him to use a thin mouth stick, about half-a-metre long, to type while sitting in his adjustable bed.

Legault has spent much of the past decade in bed. He has been struggling to recover from a massive pilonidal cyst discovered in 1999. He still has an open wound on his tailbone, which makes sitting in his wheelchair acutely painful. Still, he never misses his sons’ soccer games.

Writing has been a salvation of sorts. He began to write as therapy for both his body and spirit; he does it now to keep himself engaged with the world beyond his bedroom.

Legault is now concentrating on the book of his life, the autobiography he began writing at 25. By that time, he had been in a wheelchair for almost a decade.

He believes his life holds an important message about the power of determination.

“I don’t want people to read this and pity me. I want them to read it and go, ‘Wow, if he can do it, I can do it . . . ‘

“There’s more to life than just sitting around and doing nothing. It’s easy to give up. So many people I’ve talked to have said, ‘I would have never been able to make it.’ That never really entered my head for more than a minute. I’m too stubborn. Life’s too short. I’m going to have fun. I still feel the same way.”

copied from the Ottawa Citizen

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